|
Other 3G News
Qualcomm and Teleepoch
Enter Into a 3G CDMA Subscriber Unit License Agreement, October
6, 2007
MTN chooses Cambridge Broadband
Networks for multi-service wireless network in Rwanda, October 6,
2007
Brazilian government to
publish 3G bidding rules soon, October 6, 2007
KTF 3G service suffers
from technical problems, October 6, 2007
Argentina’s Personal
lunches 3G service in Rosario, October 6, 2007
Russia has it's first 3G
network, October 6, 2007
AT&T could drop Alcatel-Lucent
as 3G mobile network supplier, October 6, 2007
Enea Extends License Agreement
with ZTE for 3G Handsets, October 2, 2007
LG to unveil premium handsets
in Brazil, October 2, 2007
KTF 3G subscribers doubled
in less than 3 months, October 2, 2007
3G policy in India will
be non-uniform, October 2, 2007
- previous news
|
|
Low cost access, not bandwidth, key to 3G future
date: 20th January 2001, source: silicon.com
The 300-page study, entitled Third
Generation Wireless (3G): The Continuing Saga,
claims that 3G profits will only come from improving access to low bandwidth
information and services, at low cost.
The news comes as many mobile companies begin to suffer capacity problems.
Last November, for example, silicon.com reported on the
network problems which UK operator Orange has been experiencing in London.
The growth of WAP services has also been hindered by slow connections
and long download times, which will be improved by always-on
GPRS and eventually UMTS 3G networks.
Streaming video, the application which has been widely touted as
the 'killer app' for mobile commerce, is a damaging distraction
for the industry. Herschel Stosteck, president of the firm,
said in a statement: "The relentlessly cited 3G future -
'full motion video' and 'multimedia' - is irrelevant.
Indeed, the concept of the killer application is flawed and its pursuit
is detrimental to the industry."
Providing low-cost access will only be possible if mobile networks
restrict 3G roll-outs, but the infrastructure players are making
it hard for them to do this by overselling 3G, Herschel Stosteck
associate vice president Jane Zweig told silicon.com.
"Ericsson has all these 3G contracts, and aren't they proud
of them? But what are they driving the business to? There are
all these crazy drivers in place that aren't based on any business
case," she said.
Mobile networks can look forward to five years of losses before they manage
to make a profit selling 3G services, says the report. This
echoes the findings of an earlier report from Forrester Research,
predicting legal battles, bankruptcies and chaos on the bond markets
after "Europe's UMTS meltdown."
Herschel Shosteck Associates is a Washington-based wireless research
and consulting firm based. Clients include major telcos, investment
banks, equipment manufacturers and software developers.
top
|